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Pregnancy choices

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Post TFMR support and grieving

1 reply

ammmmmo · 23/02/2024 13:23

I had a surgical TFMR on Wednesday at 22 weeks. I do not know how to feel, and I almost feel like I don’t know how to grieve.

As soon as I woke up from the procedure, I cried at the realisation that my daughter was no longer there. The rest of the day I felt almost relieved that the waiting for the procedure to happen, was finally over (it was a 2 week wait from our diagnosis to the procedure, a long long time once we had come to our decision). And then the evening was just a bit of a blur as I was tired, so I just slept. The next day I looked after my toddler as normal, he keeps me very busy so I didn’t really have time to think about anything.

After he went to bed a lot of emotions hit me and I cried. I cried at the loss of the life I had allowed myself to imagine. I cried at my changing body, which where my daughter had been previous, it was now empty and lifeless. I keep instinctively touching my belly just to remember that she’s not there anymore. I cried at the fact that I will never feel her kick again, or ever get to meet her. I just want to cry but I feel like there are not enough tears to truly comprehend how I feel.

I feel completely broken but to the outside world, nothing has changed. Life goes on. My toddler keeps me busy. Family have said their sorrys but that’s it. It’s almost as if we should all move past it now but how do you move past something as momentous as this.

I feel like I want to cry but I also want to keep myself busy and carry on. I want to stay positive so I don’t drown myself in depression but I also know that I need to acknowledge the grief.

I just don’t know what to feel or do. If anyone has any support or similar experience then please do share. Thank you. <3

OP posts:
Pianolin · 25/02/2024 16:55

You don’t need to move past it. Not ever, your memory of your daughter becomes a part of you. The pain becomes much easier to bear, but you don’t move past it, more you envelope it. A TFMR is a difficult choice and you have been brave and chosen to shoulder all the pain and anguish to save your daughter from terrible pain.

If you work ask your GP to sign you off sick. Take as much time to grieve your daughter as you need. Do things for you and to help you love your changing body as it recovers. I’m thinking of you and your little girl.

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